I have blogged about Sigmund Freud’s (1856-1939) escape from Vienna before, and have visited Freud’s homes in Vienna and in London. Now let's read Andrew Nagorski’s new book, Saving Freud (2022).
Wiki
Austria was led by Catholic politicians who imposed their own Fascism but tried to limit Hitler. Chancellor Engelbert Dollfuss banned the Nazi Party, only to be assassinated by local Nazis in Jul 1934. Still Freud desperately wanted to believe Dollfuss’ successor that he would continue a policy of independence. He believed Austria’s government was basically decent.
Dr Freud’s revolutionary insights into the uncharted subconscious territory of the human mind SHOULD have prepared him for the dark forces moving towards tyranny and mass murder. In his earlier essay Civilisation and its Discontents, he had reflected on the aggressive cruelty that transformed men into savages. After Hitler took power in Germany in 1933, Freud concluded the world was becoming an enormous prison. Yet as much as he recognised these trends, Freud was reluctant to apply them to his own situation. Even when the Nazis created a 1933 bonfire of books by hated authors, including Freud!
Dr Freud’s revolutionary insights into the uncharted subconscious territory of the human mind SHOULD have prepared him for the dark forces moving towards tyranny and mass murder. In his earlier essay Civilisation and its Discontents, he had reflected on the aggressive cruelty that transformed men into savages. After Hitler took power in Germany in 1933, Freud concluded the world was becoming an enormous prison. Yet as much as he recognised these trends, Freud was reluctant to apply them to his own situation. Even when the Nazis created a 1933 bonfire of books by hated authors, including Freud!
book burning by the Nazis, May 1933
celebrated by 70,000 people at Opernplatz Berlin
The Australian
He supported his sons, Oliver (1891–1969) and Ernst (1892–1970), to leave Berlin and to move to London in 1933. Life in Germany was clearly impossible, but Sigmund still believed Austria was different. He said it was very unlikely that Austria would ever come under German rule; and even if it did, Austria wouldn’t treat Jews as brutally as the Germans did!
Early in 1938, German soldiers were massing on the Austrian border, about to annex Austria into the Third Reich. Many Jews urgently planned to flee to safety, yet Freud still couldn’t even contemplate leaving home. He was 81 years old and very ill with cancer, plus U.K migration quotas remained inflexibly tight.
Dr Freud should have been uniquely qualified to understand the dark forces propelling his world to mass murder and destruction. Why had he failed to leave Vienna when it would have been relatively easy to do so? Partly because he had spent his life claiming he was a-political. Nazi sturm and drang struck him merely as noise, the outward manifestation of messy inner lives. Deal with the death drive, he said, and insight would return. So Freud stuck to his beloved cultured Vienna, convinced Europe would soon come right.
In mid March 1938, Hitler appeared on the balcony of Vienna’s imperial Hofburg Palace to announce the Anschluss i.e incorporation of Austria into the Third Reich. With Vienna’s streets filled with jubilant Nazi supporters, thugs looted Jewish stores, defaced synagogues and attacked individuals. Then thugs plundered Freud’s publishing house, International Psychoanalytic Press.
Welsh physician-neurologist Ernest Jones (1879-1958) was a tireless promoter of Freud’s ideas across Europe. When he heard of the threat to Freud, Jones flew to Vienna and used his connections to bend British immigration rules.
American ambassador to France William Bullitt Jr (1891-1967) had been Freud’s patient in the 1920s. Their friendship developed later, through their collaboration on a psycho-biography of Pres Woodrow Wilson. Bullitt stated the U.S required Freud’s safe release.
Max Schur was Freud’s doctor who cared for the cigar-smoker with jaw cancer. Max’s loyalty was clear since he had to delay his own family’s exit, waiting for Freud.
Marie Bonaparte, Sigmund Freud, William Bullitt,
Paris, June 1938.
The Guardian
Marie Bonaparte (1882-1962), great-grandniece of Napoleon and wife of Prince George of Greece and Denmark, had been Freud’s patient before she herself became a psychoanalyst and a dedicated member of his inner circle. She too rushed to Vienna to be with Freud, paying the steep flight tax the Nazis demanded of anyone leaving the Reich.
Anton Sauerwald was the Nazi bureaucrat charged with tracking and seizing all of Freud’s assets. The anti-Semitic Sauerwald did NOT reveal to his Nazi bosses that he’d found evidence of the Freud family’s foreign holdings; he quietly signed their exit visas.
Britain was good for Freud. In July 1938 the family bought a Hampstead house with a mortgage but by then Freud was too ill to work; a year later he died. Of Freud’s children, Anna and Martin had been taken by the Gestapo, but lived. Freud’s 4 sisters stayed in Austria and were exterminated.
Freud's house in Hampstead was turned into a museum in 1986. Well worth visiting.
Anton Sauerwald was the Nazi bureaucrat charged with tracking and seizing all of Freud’s assets. The anti-Semitic Sauerwald did NOT reveal to his Nazi bosses that he’d found evidence of the Freud family’s foreign holdings; he quietly signed their exit visas.
They boarded the Orient Express and as the train rolled through Germany via Munich and Dachau, tension intensified. At 3AM the train approached the frontier where the German border guards only glanced at the documents. The train then crossed the Rhine, entering France with Marie Bonaparte before continuing to London. Free at last!
Britain was good for Freud. In July 1938 the family bought a Hampstead house with a mortgage but by then Freud was too ill to work; a year later he died. Of Freud’s children, Anna and Martin had been taken by the Gestapo, but lived. Freud’s 4 sisters stayed in Austria and were exterminated.
Freud's house in Hampstead was turned into a museum in 1986. Well worth visiting.
Freud's home museum in Hampstead, London,
1938
The reader knows that Freud had been the world’s most famous therapist using psychoanalytic insight. Nagorski created a group portrait in a psycho-biographical suspense story about the limits of genius. He told a dramatic true story about Freud’s last-minute escape to London, with the supportive friends. It was the tale of a great city, a falling empire and rising terror.
But it was not only his physical frailty that had Freud’s trapped inside the Vienna home. So the reader has to ask: was Freud’s blindness a form of political ignorance? Or psychological incompetence eg denial or narcissism? It was Freud’s good fortune that his most trusted intimates perceived the extreme dangers he couldn’t acknowledge. Plus they had the political clout to pull off the intervention, arriving arrived safely in London in June 1938.
Sigmund's sisters Rosa, Marie, Pauline, Adolfine
all exterminated in 1942
Holocaust Historical Society
Of course I have heard of Freud but know zero about his life I just know the name and that he was a famous psychiatrist who was Jewish ad died in the late 1930's. So I found this an interesting read, thank you
ReplyDeleteThank you for the insight into Freud's life and his accomplice. I recently watched the documentary on Hitler in Netflix. It made so much sense to me
ReplyDeleteHis stubbornness in not leaving earlier meant others risked the lives, and money, to get him out. I wonder if he thought he was too famous to become a Nazi victim.
ReplyDeleteHello, Helen! It's great you have visited Freud’s homes in Vienna and in London. I think it's very interesting.
ReplyDeleteFrued was ever so lucky to get to England all in one piece. Interesting about him though Hels.
ReplyDeleteJo-Anne
ReplyDeleteread the short BBC biography of Sigmund Freud
https://www.bbc.co.uk/history/historic_figures/freud_sigmund.shtml
Then if you feel like reading in more depth, the Freud Museum in London has a lot of references:
https://www.freud.org.uk/education/resources/freud-the-physician/
roentare
ReplyDeleteBack in my first incarnation, I did a first degree and a Masters in Psychology, and thought I knew it all. But if Netflix documentaries teach us more these days, and stop the brain from forgetting what we already learned, I say many thanks !
Andrew
ReplyDeleteI think it must have been the stubbornness that comes with old age and with a serious cancer crisis. Yes Freud had been the most important and most famous man in Austria, but that was years earlier, before Germany threatened Austria.
And another thing. Freud threatened the safety of his doctor, neurologist, ambassador and psychoanalyst colleagues of course... but his close family were even more at risk. His sons should have gone back to Vienna and packed him onto a train for London.. voluntarily or otherwise.
Irina
ReplyDeleteif you haven't seen the Freud Museum in London, I recommend you go on a virtual tour at
https://www.freud.org.uk/visit/virtual-tour/
For Vienna, I couldn't find a virtual tour but the Sigm.Freud Museum will give you a good starting point. https://www.freud-museum.at/en/ They are two terrific house-museums.
Margaret
ReplyDeletehe was very fortunate to get into a London home and job _at all_, but what a terrible shame to die so shortly after. If only he and his wife had listened to their children back in 1933, when he could have had a great writing career or even a great retirement.
He allowed optimism to overrule realism. That, combined with the weariness of severe illness, persuaded him to stay in Vienna rather than attempt an exhausting journey until it was almost too late.
ReplyDeletejabblog
ReplyDeleteDid the Viennese not know what a world treasure they had in Freud and at least three of his brilliant children? Or did they not care?
Thank goodness for Britain, I say.
Another interesting post. I was impressed when I visited his home in London. I did wonder how they had managed to get so many of his belongings out of Austria with him. The home in London also sheds light on his daughters achievements which were a revelation to me.
ReplyDeleteDo you remember Anna Freud from the olden days? She must have been Sigmund's successful daughter.
ReplyDeleteFun60
ReplyDeleteFreud's London house and gardens were really lovely but not the biggest estate in Britain. The ground floor of the museum now displays Sigmund Freud's study, library, hall and dining room. The first floor shows off Anna Freud's room and there is a big room which shows Freud-themed exhibitions. [The other rooms were converted into private offices].
Yes..Anna was truly vital to her father's safe settlement in London and in preserving the house as a future museum. What a brilliant woman
Deb
ReplyDeleteI DO remember Anna Freud, Sigmund’s youngest child. Remember the importance of the ego and defence mechanisms, describing the emotional conflicts in children’s development. I didn’t know this but Anna founded the Hampstead Child Therapy Course & Clinic, critical to the science of psychoanalytic child therapy.
Ernst was Sigmund’s youngest son and by 1920 was a successful architect working in the Art Deco style. By 1930 he was influenced by the brilliant Mies van de Rohe until Ernst immigrated to London and became very famous there.
Uma excelente tarde de domingo e um bom início de semana. Obrigado pela excelente aula de história. Confesso que não conhecia.
ReplyDeleteI think maybe if I was 81 and knew I was going t die of cancer I might stay put too in a city that I loved and where I felt at home . Maybe he left because of all those who had putt themselves at risk to save him ? I didn't know his siters died .
ReplyDeleteI loved seeing his home in Vienna . I was surprised at how little they had of his belongings but I think London has more .
mem
ReplyDeleteI loved the Vienna Museum too. Sigmund Freud lived and worked for almost 50 years in his home there, the important treatment and research centre of psychoanalysis. The Vienna house opened as a Museum in 1971, later including the family's private rooms, and Sigmund and Anna Freud's practices. The permanent exhibition about the science of psychoanalysis, Freud's family life and the permanent art collection were also enjoyable.
Probably Sigmund left Vienna in 1938, despite the problems you noted, only because of the experts' urging. I probably would not have wanted to leave my beloved city either.
Luiz
ReplyDeleteI did psychology in my first degree and then for my Master's, so we covered a year of Freud, Jung, Adler and Erikson studies. But my studies came decades after the Freudians and neo-Freudians' most famous era, so I was more interested in behaviourists like Skinner,
Great blog
ReplyDeleteRajani
Deletemany thanks. I recommend you read Andrew Nagorski’s book, Saving Freud if you enjoy the topic.
Wow. You seem to be implying that the German guards would have stopped the entourage if they'd checked the documents more closely? Is that right? Is that why they picked the 3am train, do you think.
ReplyDeleteAt least he died in some peace without having to face the awful indignity and horrors to befall his poor sisters.
I didn't know there was a little "mini-museum" to him in London. I can't imagine it would hold much of his belongings since he didn't stay there long.
Thanks for the read Hels.
Liam
ReplyDeleteEven if the German guards didn't know who this famous well dressed elderly man was, they certainly heard that his mother tongue was German and very scholarly at that.
Freud's house-museum in Hampstead is very well worth visiting. Because Sigmund (for a short time) and Anna (for a long time) lived and worked there, the two blue plaques identify their home a heritage site immediately.